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A47510 Advice to children by James Kirkwood ... Kirkwood, James, 1650?-1709. 1693 (1693) Wing K642; ESTC R15399 58,993 166

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no more twain but one Flesh They are by Marriage united in the nearest and closest manner that can be From whence it follows by a very Natural Consequence that 't is the Duty of Children to carry themselves in the most respectful and loving manner that is possible towards those who are by Marriage made one with their Natural Parents 2dly The Respect and Love that Children owe to their Natural Parents oblige them to shew the utmost Respect and all sincere Affection to those whom they have taken into so near a Relation with themselves We see what the Laws of Friendship do amongst Men who are very careful to shew all possible Respect and Kindness to those for whom their Friends have a great Value and Affection How much more ought Children to love honour and serve those whom their Parents have made one with themselves by chusing them into so near and close a Relation and Union 3dly Does not even Prudence oblige them to all this Is not this the way to ingage their Step-Parents to be respectful kind and serviceable to them and ready to do them all good Offices Tho' there are some Step-Parents of so barbarous and Savage a Temper that nothing can oblige them or work upon them yet there are but few in comparison who will not be affected and prevailed upon with Kindness Respect and good Offices especially when they are not for a short time but of long continuance 4thly Does not Self-Love likewise oblige Children to do these things This is the way for them to make their lives easie and comfortable to enjoy a great deal of Peace and contentment of Mind When they reflect upon their having done what is suitable to the Laws of Religion to the Rules which the Wisdom from above layeth down it must needs afford them a very sensible Pleasure and great Satisfaction whereas by carrying themselves undutifully they bring upon themselves a great deal of Vexation and Trouble they not only alienate more and more the Affection of their step-Step-Parents but they likewise provoke their Natural Parents to be less kind to them if not quite to turn their Backs upon them From what hath been said it appears how great reason Children have to carry themselves with great Respect and Love and with all possible Dutifulness towards their step-Step-Parents Against those who are undutiful towards their Step-Parents How greatly therefore are they to be blamed who make no Conscience of doing their Duty towards them There are many who make it their business to vex and torment their Step-Parents to affront them and to disgrace them They are very ready to aggravate all their Weaknesses and Imperfections and do thereby endeavour to cause others to hate and to despise them they invent too often a great many things which they charge them with that so they may by any means tho' never so wicked and unjust render them odious and infamous And which is worst of all they do all that ever they can by the most impious arts that malicious and Devilish Wit can contrive to alienate from them the affections of their Natural Parents and to set them together by the ears by which means very dreadful and Tragical Effects do oft-times follow when Husband and Wife are inflamed one against another Where Envying and Strife is saith St. James Chap. 3. v. 16. there is Confusion and every evil Work How often do such Discords and Divisions end in the utter Ruin and Destruction both of Parents and Children Every House divided against it self saith our Saviour Mat. 12.25 shall not stand And therefore let all those who have any regard to the Honour of God who have any thing of sincere Affection to their Natural Parents who desire to live in Peace who wish well to the Families to which they belong and are willing to prevent their utter Ruin and Desolation let all such I say as have any sense of these things be careful to behave themselves with all due Respect and Love towards those who are in the place of Parents to them By doing whereof as they will gain the Love and Respect of all who are wise and good so they may be assured of obtaining from God great and lasting Blessings which he never fails to bestow on all those who sincerely endeavour to Obey his Laws and who seek his Glory A DISCOURSE About the RIGHT WAY Of Improving our TIME By James Kirkwood Rector of Astwick in Bedfordshire The Second Edition Corrected and Enlarged LONDON Printed for John Tayler at the Ship in St. Paul's Church-Yard and John Everingham at the Star in Ludgate-Street near the West-End of St. Pauls 1693. Ephes V. 16. Redeeming the time because the days are evil The Introduction OF all the outward Blessings which God bestows upon us there is none so valuable and precious as our Time God bestows upon us his other Blessings in great variety and plenty but in this he seems to be more sparing for it is given us not in large proportions but as it were drop by drop one minute after another never two minutes together whenever he gives us one he takes away another And yet how strange is it to think that a great many spend their time in Vanity and Folly Time is to many like a dead Commodity they cannot tell what to do with it they are ready to throw it away for nothing or for that which is little better instead of improving and using it in virtuous and profitable actions and designs they waste it in trifling and vanity which is an Argument of the greatest Folly as on the other hand the right husbanding of Time is a great Instance of true Wisdom The Text explained The Apostle having exhorted the Ephesians to walk circumspectly not as fools but as wise he immediately subjoins Redeeming the time Intimating thereby that there is no better way for us to shew our selves wise than by employing our time to good purpose Redeeming and buying it or as some read the words Buying the Opportunity or a fit occasion and season for doing good It is a Metaphor taken from Merchants who when they have a great likelyhood and probability of making considerable gain and advantage in buying and selling part with their pleasures or lesser cares and concerns that they may make a good bargain and purchase that which they greatly desire So the Christian the Man that is good and wise ought to deny himself in his Pleasures and outward delights or even in his ordinary affairs and concerns when he has any great prospect of doing somewhat considerable for the glory of God the good of his Neighbour and the benefit of his own Soul The reason which the Apostle useth is Because the days are evil that is either bad and sinful full of wickedness and folly so that it is very hard and difficult then to be good when sin like a violent and impetuous Torrent carries all down before it This ought to make you redeem all
he took to Wife Judith the daughter of Beeri the Hittite and Bashemath the daughter of Elon the Hittite which were a grief of mind to Isaac and to Rebekah As to such undutiful Children who do thus bestow themselves against their Parents will and consent it is very remarkable that they seldom live happily and comfortably they bring upon themselves very often a great deal of sorrow and trouble lasting Misery and Woe They live to eat the fruit of their foolish doings and wish when it is to little purpose that they had never done so mad and wicked a thing 6. Duty to submit to their Parents Reproofs and Chastenings 6thly They are meekly and patiently to submit to their Reproofs to their Chastenings and Corrections It is a Power that God hath given Parents over their Children to correct and chasten them for their Faults This is necessary for Childrens good and therefore when Parents do correct them they ought not to be angry with them or grumble at their severity which they use for reforming of them much less are they to resist and rebel against them Heb. 12.9 We have had Fathers of our flesh which corrected us and we gave them Reverence Yea tho' Parents sometimes exceed the bounds of Prudence and Discretion in chastising their Children tho' they indulge a little to their own Passion yet Children are bound patiently to bear and suffer their Corrections They are not to fly out into indecent and irreverent words and actions but with all the submission and respect that 's possible ought to endeavour to mitigate the wrath and passion of their angry Parents and afterwards they are to study all that ever they can to prevent their anger and displeasure by a most humble reverend and dutiful carriage Against Rebellious Children How much may this serve to reprove those who are so far from taking in good part their Parents correcting and chastening of them that they refuse to submit thereto They resist them and rebel against them Can there be any thing more unnatural and monstrous than to see those who owe their being to their Parents who have been brought up by them who have met with so many testimonies of a tender care and of great kindness to rise up against them To fly into the faces of those who are the Authors of their being to lift up their hand against them This is a Sin of so crying a Nature that he who was guilty thereof was to be put to Death by the Law of Moses Exod. 21.15 He that smiteth his Father or his Mother shall be surely put to Death So sensible were some amongst the very Heathens of the greatness of this Sin that to shew their abhorrence of it they were wont to punish those who were Guilty of it in the following manner They sewed them in a Sack with a Dog Cat Viper and Ape and so drown'd them all together Hereby they singnified that such Persons were not any longer to be accounted Men or the Children of Men but were to be reckoned with the vilest and basest of Beasts and Vermine and in that Quality were to be cast out of the sight of all living How greatly does it aggravate this Sin when Children have met with no severe nor unmerciful dealing from their Parents But have been treated by them with all that gentleness and kindness that was possible And yet for such Children to rise up against their Parents is a Crime of so black a Nature that it is no wonder if the hand of God appear against them for it in a very signal manner as it did in the case of Absalom for whom his Father David had so great a fondness This unthankful and unnatural Son rose up against him and endeavoured by force and violence to pull him from the Throne and to usurp the Royal Dignity See how the hand of God appeared against him 2 Sam. 18.9 And Absalom met the Servants of David and Absalom rode upon a Mule and the Mule went under the thick Boughs of a great Oak and his Head caught hold of the Oak and he was taken up between the Heaven and the Earth and the Mule that was under him went away And ver 14. it is said that Joab took three darts in his hand and thrust them through the heart of Absalom while he was yet alive in the midst of the Oak And ver 15. Ten young Men that bare Joab's Armour compassed about and smote Absalom and slew him And ver 17. They took Absalom and cast him into a great Pit in the Wood and laid a very great heap of Stones upon him This was done as a lasting Monument of Absalom's sin and shame and of God's righteous Judgment upon him 7. Duty to love their Parents and how they are to express their Love 7thly Children ought to love their Parents and to express it by all those Offices which are in their Power to do for them by serving them readily by studying ways how to make them well pleased by sympathizing with them in all their troubles by assisting them and doing all they can to make their Lives joyful and comfortable by shunning every thing that may grieve them or make them uneasie They ought to refuse no labour nor pains to do them service especially when they are sick and weak oppressed with the Burden of Old Age or poor and indigent under any sort of necessity whatsoever then ought Children to be very ready to help them to comfort and to encourage them to do what in them lies to make their lives easie to them and to lighten their Burdens This is called 1 Tim. 1.4 A shewing Piety at home It is an act of Religion and Worship which God is well pleased with We see how Joseph nourished his Father and his Brethren and all his Fathers Household with Bread Gen. 47.12 How worthy of Praise was that Excellent Moabitess Ruth who not only gleaned for her poor Mother-in-Law Naomi but did also when Food was given her by Boaz for her own Refreshment reserve part of it and give it to her Mother See Ruth 2.18 It was an old Roman Law * Senec. Controv l. 1. Cont. 1.7 and 19. Let Children relieve their Parents or be put in Prison Which sheweth what was the Sense of that wise People concerning this Important Duty of Children towards their Parents they lookt upon them as unworthy of Liberty to converse amongst Men and to enjoy the common Priviledges of Society who were so far void of Humanity as not to relieve and assist their poor Parents 'T was likewise an Athenian Law * Diog. Laert. in Solone That if any did not relieve their Parents they should be esteem'd base and ignoble How many Examples have there been amongst the Heathens of Eminent Piety towards Parents Such was that Act of her Valer. Max. l. 5. Cap. 4. who when her Old Father was condemned to be put to Death in Prison visited him often and gave him suck
and so preserved him alive who otherwise must have dyed of Famine The like instance we meet with in the same Author Valer. Max. ibid. of a worthy Roman Daughter who did in the same manner preserve her Mother in Prison being Condemned to dye When the Keeper of the Prison to whom the charge of putting her to Death was committed found after some time that her Daughter kept her alive by giving her suck he was so affected with the greatness of the Daughter's Compassion and Tenderness to her Mother that he made it known to those in Power who were likewise so mightily touched with such an unusual instance of tender Affection that they pardoned the Mother as the greatest Reward they could bestow on the Daughter for her marvellous Affection What can there be more just and reasonable than for Children thus to endeavour to requite their Parents for their great care and kindness towards them when they were not able to help themselves The time was when their Parents were as Eyes and Hands and Feet to them they did every thing for them they not being capable to do any thing for themselves How ready therefore should they be to serve their Parents to assist them by all good Offices when their condition requires it This is a Duty to which Children are so strictly obliged to wit the assisting and relieving of their Parents that no pretence is sufficient to absolve them from the Obligation thereof The Pharisees thought they had found out an Exception from this Rule which was this that if Children gave away their Wealth to Pious and Charitable uses they were freed from the Obligation of relieving their Parents They taught them in this case to tell their Parents It is Corban that is to say a Gift by whatsoever thou mightest be profited by me Mar. 7.11 And by saying this they made People believe that they were sufficiently freed from all Obligations to take care of and provide for their Parents But our Saviour reproves them severely telling them that this was no other than the making void the Commandments of God by their Traditions Against unkind and unnatural Children We may see from this what Judgment to make of such unkind undutiful and unnatural Children who do wholly neglect their Parents especially in their old Age and in their poor and low Estate who shew them no more pity and express no more love nor tenderness towards them than if they were not their Parents who grudge them the least supply and take all the wicked courses that they can to starve them to death that they may be rid of them who wish and long for and rejoyce in the Death of their poor Parents O what a horrid Barbarity and Inhumanity is this Shall not many Pagans rise up in Judgment against such Children and Condemn them How little do they deserve the Name of Christian Children Their true Name is Vnchristian and unnatural Children As Solomon bid the Sluggard go to the Ant so may we bid such hard-hearted and unmerciful Children go to the Stork of whom it is told * S. Basil in Hexaemer Homil. 8. Ambros Hexaem l. 5. c. 16. that when the old Dams cannot feed themselves their little ones feed and nourish them when their Feathers fall from them they cover them with their Feathers and when they are not able to fly they couple themselves together to carry them upon their Backs Let uncompassionate Children go to this compassionate Creature and consider her ways and be wise Let them learn from her to be more kind and affectionate and tender-hearted towards their Parents and not any longer to harden their Bowels against them 8. Duty to pray for their Parents 8thly Because all that Children can do is not sufficient to requite the Love and tender care of their Parents therefore they ought to pray to God that he would reward them and preserve them and keep them alive that he would supply all their wants and comfort them in all their troubles and requite their Love their tender care and their great cost and pains they have been at to bring them up and to educate them How happy are the Parents of such Children who are supplicants and intercessors at the Throne of Grace for good things unto them Such Children are the strength of their Parents they are a great blessing unto them Against Cursers of Parents If it be the Duty of Children thus to pray to God in behalf of their Parents what shall we say of those who neither pray for them nor themselves but live like the Beasts that perish and mind nothing that 's good And if their Crime is great who do not at all pray for their Parents how dreadful is their Guilt who Curse them What dreadful Judgments may such Monsters of wickedness expect Prov. 20.20 Who so Curseth his Father or his Mother his Lamp shall be put out in obscure darkness that is he shall be reduced unto a sad afflicted and miserable State his prosperous condition which is compared to Light or to a Lamp shall be turned into Adversity and Misery and that very great which is expressed by obscure Darkness he shall be made very miserable his state and condition in the World shall become most uncomfortable as it is for a Man who walketh in a way that is full of Light where he beholds a great many Objects which afford him pleasure and delight suddenly to be deprived of all this and to find himself all alone in obscure Darkness without all help and comfort By the Law of Moses such ungodly and unnatural Children were without any pardon to be put to death Exod. 21.17 He that Curseth his Father or his Mother shall surely be put to Death The Duties of Children towards their deceased Parents The Duties of Children towards their deceased Parents Besides the Duties which Children owe their Parents whilst they are alive there are some things likewise for them to do after their Decease Particularly 1. Duty they ought to bury them decently First They ought to bury them decently according to their Quality so far as the present Circumstances of their Estate will permit They ought on the one hand to avoid whatever looks like Baseness and Covetousness and which is not in some measure answerable to their Parents Estate and Place while they lived and on the other hand they ought to avoid an over-lavish Sumptuousness they must do nothing above their Estate or above their Rank and Quality A great many out of a vain and foolish humour of Solemnizing their Parents Funerals in a sumptuous and splendid manner have so far weakened their Estate as scarce ever to be able to recover themselves again Children therefore ought in this matter to govern themselves by the Advice and Example of Prudent and Discreet Persons of their own Rank in the World but especially they are herein to govern themselves by the Will of the Dead so far as it was made
himself bound to do him all the Service he could and not to suffer him to starve for want when it was in his power to support him The Father being inraged against his Son because he took pity upon his Uncle disinherited him which the young Man bore very patiently His Uncle seeing how unjustly he was dealt with adopted him and made him his Heir After some time the Uncle grew very Rich having got a good Inheritance but the Father grew poor and was not able to maintain himself without relief from others The Uncle continuing still in his bitter Enmity against his Brother forbad the young Man to help him But such was his Love and Dutifulness to his Father that notwithstanding his former Injustice and severity against him and notwithstanding the Commands of his Uncle he took care of him and did not suffer him to want for any thing that he was able to afford him The Uncle was so provoked by his Adopted Sons kindness to his Natural Parent that he likewise disinherited him But the pious Son continued to do what he thought his Duty amidst all the Discouragements he met with May not such shining Patterns amongst the Pagans make many Christians ashamed who come so far short of them in their Duty and Obedience to their Parents Shall not they rise up in Judgment and condemn Christians who tho' they have a more excellent compleat and perfect Rule tho' they have a great deal more Light to direct them in their Duty to their Parents and tho' they have much greater assistances to enable them to perform their Duty do nevertheless carry themselves so undutifully and unchristianly as if they had never heard of the Gospel of Christ yea as if they had been born without any impressions of Natural Religion on their Minds whereby all Nations are so far instructed and enlightned as to acknowledge that to honour obey love serve and assist our Parents are Duties of unquestionable and indispensible Obligation The Conclusion shewing how Children ought to improve what hath been said From what hath been said Children may see how great reason they have to perform all those Offices of Love Honour and Subjection to their Parents that God requires of them It remains that they seriously and impartially consider what their practice has been and whether they have done those things which God requires them to do towards their Father and Mother That you may do this to good purpose it 's fit that you employ some time in looking back on your Lives in considering how you have honoured loved and obeyed your Parents that you may see whether you have carried your selves towards them in words and deeds as became good Children who have a sense of Religion or whether you have not dishonoured neglected and disobeyed them If upon Examination of your selves you find that you have done your Duty that you have sincerely endeavoured to obey them in all things that you have loved them heartily and payed them that Respect which you knew was due unto them Bless God who hath given you to will and to do according to his good Pleasure But because there are defects and imperfections which cleave to our exactest performances therefore it is needful that you beg of God to forgive you wherein soever through Ignorance you have been faulty or defective in those Duties you owed them But if upon inquiry into your Hearts and Lives you find that you have wilfully neglected to do what you ought to have done if instead of honouring them you have dishonoured them you have slighted and despised them you have mocked and scorned them you have reviled and reproached them if instead of obeying them you find that you have been stubborn and disobedient to them you have refused to follow their Counsels and Admonitions you have done your own Will and followed your own vain humour and fancy in contempt of their Will if instead of submitting to their Corrections and Chastenings you have refused submission to them and perhaps have rebelled against them if instead of loving them you have hated them and wished and desired their Death if instead of relieving them in their wants and supplying them with what was necessary for them you have wasted their substance by your riotous and extravagant Living you have put off all bowels of compassion and tenderness towards them if I say you find that you have thus carried your selves towards them in a way so contrary to your Duty how ought you to lament and mourn for your wickedness and folly How ought you to accuse your selves for your great iniquity and to aggravate your Crimes by all just and fit considerations You may in this manner expostulate the case with your selves What a sad and unworthy Wretch am I who have thus dishonoured hated and disobeyed my dear Parents who are under God the Authors of my Being in the World to whom I owe that I am who have proved so undutiful to them who took care of me when I could not take care of my self who fed and cloathed me who were at so great pains and charge for me who have employed so much of their time and strength to provide for me all necessary things and yet that I should prove so wicked as to despise them to disobey them and hate them not to submit my self unto them what base and wicked ingratitude is it That I who should have been a Blessing to them should prove a Curse That I who should have been a Comfort to them should he the cause of their grief and sorrow That I who should have been a help unto them should be so great a hinderance That I who should have been the stay and support of their Old Age should prove their ruine and the cause of the spending of their days in anguish and trouble What a prodigious impiety is this What a wretched and abominable Creature am I who have been guilty of such horrid wickedness Who have had so little regard to those who are to me in God's stead here in the World What punishment do I not deserve What a wonder is it that God hath spared me and pitied me and hath not cut me off in the midst of my disobedience neglect and contempt of my dear Parents That he hath not made me an Example to all others and a standing Monument of his just displeasure That he has not bound me hand and foot and cast me into utter darkness and given me my portion with Hypocrites and Sinners but hath lengthened out my years and given me time and place to repent Having thus in your own minds expostulated the matter with your selves you may in the next place adore and bless the Divine Goodness the infinite Mercy and astonishing Kindness of God towards you in having spared and pitied you in not dealing with you after your sins nor rewarding you after your iniquities but that he hath been pleased to wait to be gracious to you Humbly confess your faults
time is in no such danger he is sure to arrive safely at the Harbour of everlasting Rest after all the storms and tempests which he meets with in the boisterous Sea of this World The Husbandmen wait for a good season to Plough and Sow and to do all other things belonging to their Employment and when the time is favourable they are sure to make use of it The desire and hopes they have of a Harvest of a fruitful Crop quickens their endeavours and excites their industry And yet after all they may be disappointed Their Corn may be drowned by violent Rains or scorched and burnt up with violent Heat or eaten up and consumed by Insects Fowls or Beasts But the Christian who sows in tears shall reap in joy Psal 126.5,6 You see that Men who run a Race strive with great earnestness to gain the Prize to obtain that which oft-times is of no very great value And yet some of those who run come behind and are disappointed of their hopes But the Christian runs not uncertainly he is sure to obtain not a corruptible Crown but an incorruptible 1 Cor. 9.25 Again you see that Men who besiege a City or a Castle wait for all advantages and are sure not to neglect a favourable occasion of making an Assault and surprising the Enemy The hopes of getting rich Spoils of gaining Honour and Renown makes them resolute and valiant And yet it often happens that they lose their lives in the Attempt or are taken Captive by those whom they did hope to overcome and subdue But he who fights the good fight of Faith is sure to lay hold on eternal Life He who fights under Christ's Banner and who has him for his Captain is sure to obtain the Victory over all his Enemies The Conclusion I shall conclude this Discourse with what is written by St. Peter 2 Epist Chap. 3. vers 10,11 c. The day of the Lord will come as a thief in the night in the which the Heaven shall pass away with a great noise and the Elements shall melt with fervent heat the Earth also and the works that are therein shall be burnt up Seeing then that all these things shall be dissolved what manner of Persons ought you to be in all holy Conversation and Godliness Looking for and hastening unto the coming of the day of God wherein the Heavens being on fire shall be dissolved and the Elements shall melt with fervent heat Nevertheless we according to his promise look for new Heavens and a new Earth wherein dwelleth righteousness Wherefore beloved seeing that ye look for such things be diligent that ye may be found of him in peace without spot and blameless FINIS THE CONTENTS OF Advice to Children THE Introduction 1 1. Duty of Children to Honour their Parents And how they are are to Honour them 2 The Poverty of Parents does not exempt Children from this Duty 6 Against those who dishonour their Parents 7 2. Duty of Children to obey their Parents and hearken to their Instructions 10 Against stubborn and disobedient Children 14 3. Duty to be faithful to their Parents and not to dispose of their goods without their consent 16 Against unfaithful and treacherous Children 18 4. Duty of Children to be determined by their Parents as to their Calling 20 Against Children who neglect this Duty 22 5. Duty of Children not to suffer themselves to be bestowed in Marriage against their Parents will 23 Against those Children who neglect this Duty 26 6. Duty of Children to submit to their Parents Reproofs and Chastenings 27 Against Rebellious Children 28 7. Duty of Children to love their Parents and how they are to express their Love 31 Against unkind and unnatural Children 35 8. Duty of Children to pray for their Parents 36 Against Cursers of Parents 37 The Duties of Children towards their Deceased Parents 38 1. Duty they ought to bury them decently 38 2. Duty to fulfill their last Will. 40 3. Duty to call to mind their good Advices and to follow their good Examples 40 4. Duty to do what they can lawfully to suppress Evil Reports concerning them 42 5. Duty to retain a firm kindness for their Friends 43 Against Children who neglect these Duties 44 Motives to excite Children to do these things 1. Motive from the Authority of him who commands them to do these things 46 2. Motive from the Promise made to those who do their Duty 49 3. Motive from the Example of our Blessed Master 53 4. Motive from the Examples of some Heathens 56 The Conclusion shewing how Children ought to improve what hath been said 60 The Duties of Children to their Step-Parents 70 Some Motives to stir up Children to be Dutiful to them 72 Against those who are undutiful towards their Step-Parents 74 THE CONTENTS OF The Discourse about the Right Way of Improving our Time THE Introduction 79 The Text explained 80 How Time is to be redeemed 1. Time is to be redeemed from sleep 82 2. It is to be redeemed from dresing and adorning the Body 86 3. It is to be redeemed from eating and drinking 90 4. It is to be redeemed from gaming 92 5. It is to be redeemed from visiting 97 6. Time is to be redeemed from Worldly Business 105 Short and ferv●nt Ejaculations ev'n in Time of Business recommended 109 7. It is to be redeemed from idleness 111 8. It is to be redeemed in sacred and religious Perfomrances by doing them in the best manner 114. Some Motives to Excite you to do these things 1. Motive from the shortness of your Time 125 2. Motive from the uncertainty of your Time 129 3. Motive from the greatness and difficulty of the work you have to do 138 4. Motive from the account you must give how you spend your Time 145 The Conclusion 152 FINIS
known to them or others Thus we see Joseph and his Brethren did to their Father Jacob when he died he charged them to Bury him with his Fathers in the Cave that is in the Field of Ephron the Hittite Gen. 49.29 And accordingly his Sons did as he commanded them Gen. 50.12,13 2. Duty to fulfil their last Will. 2dly They are likewise to shew the greatest readiness that is possible to Obey their Parents in every other thing which by their last Will they appointed and Ordered to be done for Example the Payment of Debts and Legacies the giving so much Money for some Excellent and Pious Design or for the Relief of some Persons in Distress and Want c. The Will of the Dead has in all Ages and amongst all People been reckoned a thing most Sacred and Inviolable Now if the Will of the Deceased be Obligatory unto any it must certainly be so in a special manner to Children whom both the Laws of Natural and Revealed Religion require to Obey their Parents in all things 3. Duty to call to mind their good Advices and to follow their good Examples 3dly They ought to call to mind often their Parents good Advices and to follow their Pious Examples If whilst they were alive they neglected or at least did not observe so well as they should have done their Admonitions and Instructions and did not make very great account of their good Examples they ought now they are gone from them and to return to them no more to endeavour to be so much the more careful to follow their useful Directions and Examples There is no such way as this to keep the Memory of Parents fresh and green There can no Monument be erected comparable to this when Children imitate their Parents Virtue and Piety The good Kings which came of the Stock and Lineage of David made the Memory of their Father David to be still sweet and flourishing when his Body was rotten in the Grave Thus 't is said of Solomon 1 King 3.3 He walked in the Statutes of David his Father And of Asa it is said 1 King 15.11 And Asa did that which was right in the Eyes of the Lord as did David his Father And of Josiah it is written 2 King 22.2 He did that which was right in the sight of the Lord and walked in all the ways of David his Father and turned not aside to the right hand or to the left 'T will be an Act of Justice as well as a Testimony of due Respect and Love to your Deceased Parents now and then to make Honourable mention of them to talk of their good Advices their useful Sayings and their good Customs and Examples But this is not to be done too often nor in all Companies only amongst those who will bear it and at such times when it is most likely to do good 4. Duty to do what they can Lawfully to suppress evil Reports concerning them 4thly They ought to do all that they can Lawfully in a calm and prudent manner to suppress evil Reports which are spread abroad of their Parents after their Decease The Credit and Honour of Parents ought to be very dear to Children And therefore when their good Name is wounded and when they by Death are incapable to vindicate themselves 't is the Duty of Children who are as it were their living Images to do their utmost to preserve their Name from injurious Reports If what is said of them be manifestly false Children ought to make known the naked truth so far as is fit which will be the best and surest Vindication But if what is said against their Parents be true and of that Nature as to admit of no excuse or extenuation the best thing that Children can do in such a case is to avoid such wicked things themselves as their Parents were Guilty of They who follow the Evil Example of Parents cause them to stink more and more The posterity of Jeroboam who followed his wretched Example made his Evil Name to be the more remembred and caused this blur to continue in his Character from one Age to another Jeroboam which made Israel to Sin 5. Duty to retain a firm kindness for their Friends 5thly They ought to retain a sincere and firm kindness and esteem for all those who witnessed a true and constant Christian Friendship to their Parents who were always faithful to them ready to serve them and to do them all good Offices according to their ability Such Persons it may be very reasonably presumed will not be treacherous and unfaithful to the Children who have testified a lasting and faithful Friendship to the Parents Thy own Friend saith Solomon and thy Father's Friend forsake not Prov. 27.10 Against Children who neglect these Duties Now if it be the Duty of Children to express their Love and Regard towards their deceased Parents in the abovementioned manner what shall be said of those who run a course quite contrary to all this No sooner are their Parents dead but they begin to rejoyce and triumph and to bless themselves that at last they are delivered from those restraints they were formerly under and that now they have the liberty to give themselves the swing and to gratifie every Lust and Passion as much as ever they can As to their Parents Will they take no care to fulfill it henceforth they know no other Will but their own as to that of their Parents they think they had too much to do with it when they were alive and now that they are dead they reckon themselves absolved from all Obligations to them As to their Debts and Legacies c. They make no Conscience to pay them unless a necessity of submitting to the Laws force them to do their Duty As to the Credit and good Name of their Parents so little regard have they thereto as to be ready to give ear to those who speak ill of them yea themselves are apt to blaze abroad such things as tend to their Reproach and Disparagement As to their Advices and Admonitions they laugh at them they look on them as fit only to be list'ned to by melancholly dull Souls who have no relish of Manly Pleasures They have no mind to be interrupted in their Mirth and Jollity and therefore farewell any Advice or Council that looks like serious As to their Example they slight and despise it they look on themselves as too wise to be led either by Precept or Example but according as they suit their own Humour and Inclination As to their Parents Friends they turn their Backs upon them they break off all Correspondence with them and keep them at the greatest distance as if they were afraid of them they know that they are of the same Temper and Principles with their Parents and therefore they cannot endure them for fear of being told by them some thing or other that does not agree with their vain and wicked
should drink no Wine nor build House nor sow Seed nor plant Vineyard nor have any but should dwell in Tents Jer. 35.6,7 c. And ver 18. Jeremiah said unto the House of the Rechabites Thus saith the Lord of Hosts the God of Israel because you have obeyed the Command of Jonadab your Father and kept all his Precepts and done according to all that he hath Commanded you Therefore thus saith the Lord of Hosts the God of Israel Jonadab the Son of Rechab shall not want a Man to stand before me for ever Which words import that he would take a particular care of them that he would be mindful of them and have them in his Eye that he would preserve them and shew them his favour and love and continue unto them those Offices and Priviledges which they enjoyed which some think were of being Scribes and Doctors of the Law and having some Charge in or about the Temple 3. Motive from the Example of our Blessed Saviour Thirdly Besides the Command of God and the Reward which he hath promised to them who honour their Parents how strong an Argument ought it to be unto all Children to excite them to this when they consider the Example of their Blessed Lord and Master their King and Saviour Jesus Christ of whom it is said that he was subject unto his Parents Luke 2.51 And if he who was so much greater than his Parents who was their Lord their King their Maker their Saviour and Redeemer if he who was the Son of God and thought it no Robbery to be equal with God I say if he was subject to his Parents ought not all Children to be so to their Parents and to esteem it their Glory to imitate their Prince and Saviour as in his other Virtues so in his Obedience and Subjection to his Parents Shall any Man think himself too good to do this when Christ did it before him Can it be too mean for a Worm to do that which a Man a great Man and a mighty Prince hath done Shall vile Sinners think themselves abased and dishonoured by doing that which was done before by him who knew no sin and in whose Mouth there was found no guile who was holy harmless and undefiled separate from sinners and made higher than the Heavens Heb. 7.26 As our Blessed Lord was a great and Noble Pattern to us in other things so particularly in his love to his Parents When he was upon the Cross a little before he gave up the Ghost he expressed how great his love was to his Mother and how tender a care he had of her John 19.25,26,27 Now there stood by the Cross of Jesus his Mother and his Mother's Sister Mary the Wife of Cleophas and Mary Magdalene When Jesus therefore saw his Mother and the Disciple standing by whom he loved he saith unto his Mother Woman behold thy Son Then saith he to the Disciple behold thy Mother And from that hour that Disciple took her unto his own home He commends his Mother to John Joseph in all probability being dead that he might take care of her as of his own Mother Tho' he was at this time in the midst of great pain and anguish tho' his hands and his feet were nailed to the Cross tho' his Head was Crowned with Thorns tho' he lay under the most insupportable Burden that ever Man lay under yet as if the sight of his Mother had made him forget all his Sufferings and Torments he affectionately recommends her to the care of another who he knew would perform all the Offices of a loving Son unto her He knew how great an affliction it would be to her to be deprived of the Comfort of his presence in the World he knew to how many necessities and wants she should be exposed by his leaving of her and therefore he gives it in charge to the beloved Disciple to do the Duty of a Son unto her to be to her in his stead to honour her to love her to serve her to take care of her and provide whatever might be fit for her This shews all Children what is their Duty towards their Parents to wit that they ought to take care of them so long as they live and are able to do it they ought with all respect and kindness to perform unto them all those Offices which the Laws of Nature and Christianity require 4. Motive from the Examples of some Heathens Fourthly May not the Examples of some Heathens which have already been mentioned excite Christian Children to perform their Duty to their Parents There are a great many more Instances might be added to this purpose I shall only mention a few The first is * Valer. Max. l. 5. c. 4. Plut. in Coriola●… of the brave Coriolanus that Great Roman Commander who being very ill used by his Country-men fled to the Volscians who were at that time at War with the Romans Within a little time after his coming amongst them he was made General of their Forces in which Service he had great Success against the Romans gaining several Victories over them whereby he was encouraged to approach to the very Walls of Rome His Countrey-men were terribly alarmed with this so that they were forced to make humble Addresses to him to deprecate his displeasure but to no purpose They sent their Priests in their Sacred Vestments but to as little Effect But no sooner did his Mother attended with his Wife and Children come to him but he submitted himself to her Now says he you have overcome me indeed when the intreaties of my Mother are added to yours tho' Rome deserve my hatred yet for my Mother's sake I will spare it and immediately he withdrew his Army A second Example is that of the Worthy Athenian Captain Cimon * Val. Max. ibid. who not being able to redeem the Corps of his Father which was Arrested for Debt sold himself and became a Slave that his Deceased Father's Body might be freed from that Arrest that was upon it and so might have Honourable Burial This great Man was famous for his Noble and Valiant Exploits for his great Courage and Excellent Conduct in Military Affairs but there was not any thing for which he was so much admired and loved as for this wonderful instance of Affection and Respect to his Father A Third Example is * Sen. l. 1. Controversiarum c. 1. of a Son whose Father and Uncle were at great variance It happ'ned that the Uncle during this Contention fell into great want His Brother was so madly and wickedly set against him that he not only would not relieve him himself but also forbad his Son to do it The young Man considered his Uncles Case to be such as obliged his Father and himself both to help him all they could But if his Father through his violent Passion and Prejudice neglected his Duty which the Laws of Nature and Humanity required yet he judged
and offences unto him with great shame and confusion of face and with true grief and sorrow of heart ackowledge your iniquities make particular confession so far as you remember of your stubbornness and disobedience to your Parents of your contempt and neglect of them of your hating them and wishing Evil to them of your speaking irreverently and wickedly to them or of them of your not submitting to their Corrections of your not heeding their Admonitions and Counsels nor regarding their just Reproofs c. Beg of God for Christ's sake to have mercy on you and to blot out your Sins and to make you what you ought to be After this it is fit to form sincere and hearty Resolutions of doing your Duty in all respects to your Parents for the time to come of loving honouring obeying and serving them as you ought to do Resolve to amend whatever has been amiss and defective either in your thoughts words or deeds with relation to them Beg of God to strengthen you in your Resolutions to fortifie you against all Temptations to inspire you with his Fear and Love to guide you by his good Spirit and that he would never leave you nor forsake you If the Example and Society of other wicked Children has been an occasion of making you so bad and of hardening you in your Contempt Stubbornness and Disobedience resolve to break off your Familiarities with them let them and all others know and see that you are sorry for your Disobedience to your Parents for your having dishonoured slighted and neglected them and that you are resolved to do so no more but will by the help of God approve your selves Dutiful Kind and Obedient Children Not only must you in this manner make your Humble and Penitent Confession to Almighty God your Heavenly Father whom you have provoked as by your other Sins so particularly by your disobedience to your Parents and by your dishonouring of them but you must likewise confess unto your Parents the Crimes whereof you have been guilty against them you must say as the Prodigal did I will arise and go to my Father and will say unto him Father I have sinned against Heaven and before thee and am no more worthy to be called thy Son Luke 15.18,19 Let your Parents see that you are heartily sorry for your Offences against them by Word or Deed beg of them to forgive you and desire them to pray to God that he would forgive you You are to be careful after this to fulfil your Purposes and Resolutions and to perform all those Duties of Love Honour and Obedience to your Parents wherein you were formerly so defective For this end it is fit daily and earnestly to beg of God that he would direct and assist you by his Holy Spirit to do what is well-pleasing in his sight It is necessary for you to be very jealous of your deceitful and desperately wicked Hearts to watch over them carefully lest they turn aside towards your former crooked Ways lest you return with the Dog to the Vomit Watch against all those Temptations whereby you are most in danger of being seduced and intangled again in your former perverse Practices and Customs As you have been formerly very negligent and defective in Honouring and Obeying your Parents endeavour for the future so much the more to perform all those Duties which you owe unto them with great care and exactness As you have been great Examples of Disobedience strive to be so much the greater Patterns of Obedience Endeavour to do all that you can that they who have been by your Counsels or Examples corrupted and made stubborn and disobedient may be reformed and rescued from their Sins and Wickedness that as you have been Instruments to promote Satan's Kingdom so you may be zealous for the glory of God for promoting Piety and true Virtue in the World whereof this is no inconsiderable part that Children Honour their Father and Mother and do all those Duties with chearfulness unto them which God requires This is the way to obtain the divine pardon to turn away his Wrath and to keep off those heavy Judgments which are threatned against stubborn Children and such who mock and scorn their Parents Or if God see it fit to punish you here he will make your Corrections and Punishments and all other things work together for your good and after he hath tryed you he will bestow upon you rewards of everlasting Life and Glory As for those who are so perverse as to despise all Counsel and Advice who refuse to hearken to any Instructions who are resolved to go on in their stubbornness and disobedience to their Parents in slighting and vilifying them let them remember what the Wise Man saith Eccles 11.9 Rejoice O young Man in thy Youth and let thine heart chear thee in the days of thy youth and walk in the ways of thine heart and in the sight of thine Eyes But know thou that for all these things God will bring thee into Judgment An Appendix concerning the Duties of Children to their Step-Parents The Duties of Children to their Step-Parents HAving spoken of the Duties of Children to their Natural Parents I shall add a few things concerning their Duties to their Step-Parents Children ought to honour their Step-Parents to carry themselves Respectfully towards them and to avoid every thing either in words or deeds which has an appearance of Neglect and Contempt They ought to Obey them and to shew great readiness to serve them in any thing that is in their power to do for them and to avoid whatever looks like stubbornness especially in such things wherein their Natural Parent requires them to be Obedient to their Step-Parent They ought to carry themselves kindly and lovingly towards them and to avoid whatever looks like Hatred or Malice They ought to submit to their Reproofs and to their Chastenings especially when their Natural Parent desires the Step-Parent to reprove or correct them for their faults They ought to hearken to their Admonitions to follow their good Counsels and Examples and to be thankful for whatever they either do or say for their benefit and advantage They ought to bear patiently with my thing in their humour and temper that is not so sweet and pleasant and to beware lest they be thereby provoked to do or say what becometh not Children towards those who are in the place of Parents to them As to these particular Duties I thought it needless to say much having treated of them more fully in the preceeding Discourse about Childrens Duties to their Natural Parents I shall therefore in the next place propose Some Motives to stir up Children to be Dutiful to their Step-Parents Some Motives to stir up Children to be Dutiful to them The first thing which should prevail with Children to carry themselves Dutifully towards their Step-Parents is the regard that is due to the Laws of God whereby it is declared that Man and Wife are